Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 21, 1916, Page 9, Image 9

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iJllli.1UJ.ll VJI W A
JONE
STEWART HARM
UlUUlUll U1IU 11UU
PLAYS FOR IOYfANS
Cornhntker Ooaob Disoardi Old
Formations and Will Develop
New Line of Stuff,
BONES BY 000K AND OALEY
Lincoln, Nov, 20. (Special.) Just
by way of making the Hunker equad
forget all about the nightmare of last
Saturday, Dr. E. J, Stewart put them
through a vlgoroui scrimmage to
night. .With very few exception! the
Huskers emerged from the Saturday
conflict in splendid physical condi
tion for the tray with Iowa at Iowa
City next Saturday afternoon. Some
of the backfield men were lugging
minor bruises, but Stewart is rejoic
ing to think no one was more seri
ously injured. ,
One thing is certain Nebraska
will hot present a claim for the Mis
souri Valley championship, although
the Huskers are on top of the pile
so far as percentages go. The Jay
hawkers lost one conference game
and were tied in one; the Missouri
Tigers lost on and were tied in one,
ana Amei iosi pne ana uca in one.
. Nebraska alone suffered one defeat.
The Husker management and the un
dergraduate body feel that a cham
pionship based on those claims is not
worth having.
It will be the accented view at Ne
braska that there Is not a champion
ship eleven worthy of the name in
the entire Missouri Valley confer
ence and Missouri, Kansas and Ames
can have one joyous little battle all
to themselves for the empty title.
Cook and Caley Panned.
Tha Husker undergraduates" are
Sill) unaxu py mo flUll ui ins
'urday game. In some quarters criti
cism of Coach Stewart has been
heard, but it is not general. The gen
eral feeling here is that the poor gen
eralship of Cook' and Caley and the
fatal mistake of Otoupalik in the
third quarter cost the Huskers a con
ference crown. Cook, perhaps, Is to
be more censured than Caley if any
censure it to be given, for he fell
flat in his judgment when the -Huskers
had the ball in Kansas territory
and were knocking at the Kansas
goal for touchdown.
Dr. Stewart spent an entire weeK
drilling the Huskers on new forma
tions. When Nebraska was within
reach of a touchdown Cook forgot
all about the new formations and
kept hammering away with straight
football, ramming the, line and ham
mering the ends. Caley called jifst
one new formation and called it at
a time when It never should have
been used when the ball was close
to the Nebraska goal. It failed to
work and the Huskers were spilled
for a ten-yard loss. The experience
frightened Caley so badly he did not
call for another.
Coach Remgins Calm,
The Nebraska eoach alone remains
calm and refuses to comment en the
Kansas defeat. He said he did not
have a word of criticism for" any
member of the team.
Starting tonight, the Huskers will
make an effort to wipe out the sting
of that one defeat by cleaning up on
Iowa and Notre Dame. All of the
old formations are to be shoved into
the discard and a new line of stuff
developed. Stewart is going to de
termine upon a lineup and use it for
the remainder of the season,
About the first thing the Huskers
have before them is to acquire rudi
mentary knowledge of the forward
pass.
t is mri i
injured, micmgan
Player Recovering
Ann Arbor, Mich., Nov, 20. Phy
sicians attending Wlllard Peach,
Michigan right end, who was removed
from Saturday's game with Fennsyl.
vania after he became unconscious
from a blow on the mouth, asserted
today he is recovering, but will be
unable to attend classes for several
days.
"Y" Cross-Country Run
Limited to Local Lads
The annual cross-country run to be
held Thanksgiving day under the aus
pices of the Young Men's Christian
association will be limited this year
to Omaha athletes only. Heretofore
Ames and Nebraska University run
ners have competed, but their entries
were denied this year, so as to arouse
more local interest in the event.
Hamlin Wins.
Ht. Paul. Minn., Nov. tl. Hamlin uni
versity defeated MacAlsster college for the
first time In el yeaa In Ihelr annual grid
iron contest here today. S to 0-
Hloan's Liniment for Rheumatism.
. ,ou have rheumatism, lumbago, pet a
See bottle or Sloan's Liniment. II mile Ine
pain. All druggists. Advertisement,
t? A rnrrTr)
11 ua 1 1 i i
J. xiiuuiv
"1 If NOW WHEN VE Pr-A 1 I ( MPi . ( SIR-HOW 1 If DON'T fou 1 Wl ( 1
SHiMJ. WE DROP
v i . I r . . r i . .nrvmr . i i i v---v sv v , . - . oc-k.. 1 t i r i . 1 i in i i
IN MIO SEE THE
while VE
ARE OUT
Germans Hold Fall I
Of Monastir Is Not
Much of a Reverse
Berlin, Nov. 20. (By Wireless to
Sayville.) "Monastir'a evacuation by
the Germans and Bulgars," says the
Overseas News agency, "was a meas
ure which had been prepared for sev
eral days by the chief command of
the central allies. The Serbians had
crossed the river Cerna and, advanc
ing northward with superior forces,
had reached the height north of Che
gel after engagements in which the
tide of battle fluctuated and during
which General Otto von Bulow, at the
head of the German riflemen, stormed
and captured a height,
"The height taken by the Serbians
was upon the same level as Monastir,
so that the Serbians were able to ob
serve the German-Bulgarian positions
and were able to shell them from the
flanks. Simultaneously strong French
forces advanced upon the positions on
the Monastir plain. The maintenance
with heavy sacrifices of a position
without any importance as regarded
the general strategical situation would
not have been justifiable. Therefore
the evacuation Of Monastir was a mat
ter of course, as it was lacking in
military importance.
"The Germans and Bulgarians oc
cupied positions on the hill north of
Monastir, from which they dominated
the basin of the Cerna. Monastir is
under the range of our guns, which
meant that its position is insecure.
"The occupation of Monastir does
not in the least change the strategical
situation in the Balkans. General
Sarrail't task, which was to accom
plish a junction with the Russia-Roumanian
army advancing from Do.
brudja, has failed and now never qan
be accomplished. The broad strate
gical plan of the entente would have
been complied with if General- Ser
ratfl had advanced on his eastern flank,
but at he was unable to break up the
Bulgarin pressure in this sector his
principl attacks-were carried out more
and more to the westward. Although
he thus obtained minor local -successes,
he thereby made open avowal
of the fact that the original plan for
joining hands with Russo-Roumanian
armies had been abandoned."
DarioRestalsOnly
Claimant to Title
Of Champion Driver
Los Angeles, Cal., Nov. 20. Dario
Resta, automobile racing driver, be
came the sole claimant today of the
American Automobile association's
title of "champion driver of America"
when Johnny Aitken, his rival, an
nounced that he would not race at
Ascot speedway on Thanksgiving day.
Aitken said tonight he was leaving
at 0nce for the east with Wilcox, his
teammate. He said that the prize
money offered in the Ascot event was
not sufficient to be attractive.
Resta has 4,100 points for the cham
pionship title. With Aitken out there
IS no one remaining who can defeat
him by winning the 700 pbinta allowed
the Ascot winner. This is the final
cpntest of the year In which points
will be allowed.
Thirty-EightTeams
Seek Admittance to
. Basket Ball Loops
A meeting of all persons interested
in basket ball will be held at the
Young Men's Christian association to
night. Thirty-eight teams have ap
plied for admittance into the three
Omaha leagues, the Tri-City, Com
mercial and Church leagues, so a
large attendance is expected. Even
the Presbyterian church at Platts
mouth seeks a place in the church
loop.
Bohemians Hold Exhibit
Of Gymnastic Classes
Are girls necessarily the weaker
sex? I
The Bohemian srvmnastic society of
the Tel Jed Sokol Trys exhibited
twenty-seven athletic types Sunday
afternoon in their hall, Thirteenth and
Dorcas streets. They were young
girls, all betweeen the ages of 4 and
8 years, but as they gave their "wide
drill" the sturdy youngsters showed
muscular agility and grace. The girls,
all children of well-known Bohemian
families, were the hit of the program.
The grils' ring drill, presented by
twenty-four girls, wks another display
of feminine athletic prowess that
earned applause. Old veterans of the
society gave the men's dumb bell drill,
and although some memories slipped
a cog in the exhibit the drill was a
success.
Fifteen hundred people saw the pro
gram. A social and dance wasvheld in
the evening.
ncntechland lines Soon.
New London, Conn., Nov. II. Repairs ta
the Qsrman submarine Deutachland will be
completed soon. The draft Is expected to
start tte homeward voyage tha latter part
of the watM.
THE BEE:
OoyHght. 11.
taUnutiutuU Newa Serrtt
Y -
CATCHER CHIEF METEBS IS
ON MARKET.
Just when rhe Brooklyn club has
decided to release Chief Meyers has
not been ascertained, but the rumor
is persistent that: the old Giant re.
liable, when Marquard was at his best,
would be disposed of during the win
ter months. According to the story,
Manager Robinson considered that his
value as a backstop for the Dodgers
has decreased, but in what manner it
not stated . i
White Will Fight
To Recover Money
From Decatur Bank
Albert S. White of the Central
State bank, who is trying to recover
$8,000 which he says he deposited in
the defunct Farmers' State bank at
Decatur, is peeved at what he calls
the "autocratic form of government"
in Nebraska, He says:
"Shortly before election, the state
banking department announced
through the newspaper! that it had
mailed the receiver of the Farmers'
State bank at Decatur, Neb., drafts
on the guarantee fund for an amount
sufficient to pay all depositors of the
failed bank, except one or two whose
claims had not been allowed by the
court.
"When the Centra! State bank of
Omaha was organized last spring,
I deposited in the Decatur bank
$8,000, belonging to the stockholders
of the proposed Central state bank,
This 'deposit was made with full re
liance in the good faith and integrity
of the Nebraska law providing a
guarantee fund for the payment of
the deposita in tailed banks.
"After the failure of the Decatur
bank, some of the large depositors
went into court and proved the valid
ity ot their deposits. In our case we
had, in addition to our correspondence
with the bank, the sworn testimony
of the cashier and the vice president
of the Decatur bank as to the validity
and regularity of our deposit, and no
evidence whatever was offered by the
banking board as a reason why this
deposit should not be paid. Accord
ingly, Judge Day, before whom the
proceedings were heard, ordered the
payment of our claim.
"A few days ago I telephoned the'
receiver of the Decatur bank, asking
why we had not received our $8,00$
He informed me that he had paid all
ot tne otner depositors in tne bank,
but notwithstanding Judge Day a or
der that our claim be paid, the bank
ing board, comprised of Governor J,
H. Morehead, Auditor Mr. Smith and
Attorney General Reed, had instruct
ed him that our deposit was not to
be paid,"
Wlttaabarf Wine.
Springfield, O., Nov. 16. Witt an burr, it;
Barlham. 7.
! Malaria Destroys
! Jm:: y j
! wL' J p
Red Corpuscles of the Blood
S. S. S. Relieves Malaria By Cleansing The Blood.
Malaria impoverishes the blood,
thereby weakening the entire system.
Once the Malarial germ get into the
blood It multiplies, saturating the
blood with Malarial poison and im
parities. You lose energy. You are a
constant prey to headachea, worn-out
tired feeling. The complexion be
comes sallow, the tongue coated. In
order to get relief you must adminis
ter an antidote directly to the poison,
and a tonic blood nourishing food,
to build up the wasted system. S. 8.
S, is the one thoroughly reliable blood
tonic (hat will destroy the Malarial
OMAHA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1918.
ITALY EAST'S GATE
Wartime Conditions Far Lesi
Filled With Hardship Than
Supposed.
WELCOME TO AMERICANS
(Correspondence of The Associated Press.)
Milan, Italy, Nov. 20. The explana
tion of the Increasing number of
American firms settling in Italy, is the
realization that Italv It the future
gateway to the Orient and to the
near east, according to Charles F.
Haqat, president of the American
Chamber of Commerce for Italy.
"Because of its geographical posi
tlon, joining tha norta of Europe to
the Orient," said Mr. Hauss to a
correspondent oV The Associated
Press, "Italy today offers better bust
ness opportunities for Americans, in
my estimation, than South America or
the far east. It has a fine commercial
stragetic position and its government
and people are actively awaro of the
fact, and intend to push this advan
tage of location.
Dividends Are ,Pald.
"Wartime Italy is far more prosper
ous than is generally known. The re
cent declaration of dividends showed
earnings higher even than in peace
times. It is alto not generally klip- n
that Italy bought more products i
the United States during the past year
than in any four other great coun
tries. It bought over $200,000,000
worth from us, as compared to $80,
000,000 In England, 150,000,000 In the
Argentine, $50,000,000 in France, and
$15,000,000 In Switaerland. It is sell
mar to ua something over $50,000,000
worth a year, which it about its nor
mal yearly sales, before tne war.
"There is going to be much more
business between Italy and the United
States, as this big tact of its geo
graphical situation Is better appre
ciated, and when both Italy and the
United States increase their number
of merchant thipt, at present tadly
inadequate to handle, the cargoes
either way. Italy has provided and
will continue to Provide abundant re
turn cargoes, tuch as its renowned
silks, laces, furniture, alimentary
foods, wines, cheese, Its beautiful
marbles, hematite iron, lead and zinc
ores, as well at eertain Other manu
factures in which it excels. Before
the war, Italy was laying the ground
for a fine national merchant marine
and right now during the war,- it is
continuing that policy.
"I have lived In Italy nearly eight
of the teventeen years I have been
in Europe, and I can tay that Italy
has the most liberal government I
have ever lived under, Its laws,
though severe, arc just, and when
you get to know Italians and their
customs, you will realize what great
strides they have made In science,
industry and commerce during the
last forty years o a United Italy.
Milan, with its more than 600,000 in
habitants, the heart of industrial Italy,
has a record growth unique in mod
ern European i history, its popula
tion has increased fifty per cent in the
last ten years, due to tne wealth and
hustle ot its business nien.
"AH of the American firms now in
Italy to my knowledge and belief are
prospering, tome even more than pre
vioua to the war.
"It it no more difficult to organize
a separate company here than else
where, though it would be well before
settling for an American company to
first carefully try out the field by ac
tual trial of its goods on the Italian
market. Obviously, for some kinds
of goods, a aeparate company is not
advisable, as in the case of goods
light in weight, of smalt volume;
and of a certain value, such goods
may be tea-shipped and easily en
tered, if the tariff is not high.
"Italian tariffs are not oppressive,
and they are always specific, never
ad valorem. This, of course, means
that the higher the value of the mer
chandise the easier It is to export to
Italy.
"Italy welcomes American initia
tive, capital and merchandise of all
the
germs, and enrich the blood. Thia
building up and blood cleansing pro
cess go hand in hand. You feel the
effect immediately. S. 8. S. begins
at the root of the trouble. It destroys
the germs and poiton, revitalizea and
restoree the red blood corpuscles. In
a short time you feel the delightful
sensation of relief from ague, head
ache, chills and fever. You soon feel
the full sense of vigor that goes with
perfect health. There ia nothing aa
good. Get S, S. 8. from your druggist.
Medical advice without charge. Write
Medical Dept., Swift Specific Co.,
Atlanta, Ga.
Drawn for
Today' Calendar of Sports
Oolf i Annoal autumn tournament ot I'lna-
hurt Coniitry luh, IMiwhurst, N. C.
1 1 . . I. m1Lm uvalnst
IlM, (mill limn, , '- i -
exne iinim nm-i--,
Tel. University ( Teiaa atralaat Koulb-
weMieru univenmy, si ne,Mn, -
U-, . .. 1 1 - UlhlU - t U, J.( 11 -it.
a . . 1 . - . .... l)M(.,M
ata'lnst Al Mrl'oy.'lrn rounds, el Hrookiyo.
nver uammar against wv -,..". - -rounds,
at rtaalao. . HU WaUaM
against nulla ,.' n , - . .
at. l-nuls. Jark Mark hum asnlnst Jackie
( lark, era rannns, at rwawewe, rm.
kintla, eipccially seml-finiihcd pro
ducts and raw material.?.
"The war lias opened it cyst to the
latent capabilities it possessed finan
cially as well as industrially, and it is
going to keep on going ahead."
Uncertain HumUt.
"Briefly lUt-d," ws .. twd, "the dtory
of Knoch Aril en tu about M follow.,; He
went to eat, na wu ihipwrerkfd on n un
inhabited lplnl I" remained fur eev
eral year, When at laat he waa foerued
Mr. Arden put out (or home with conld-
erable tapldity, only to find that durlnit hit
abnenoe Mr. Aril en had married analn.
What do you suppoaa waa hti aubnoyuent
aetlon ?"
"Hard to flMtr." replied Mr. Oap John
sen of Bumpla Ridge, Ark., who had been
Untenlni with deep intereat to the recital.
"You can't tell which way a toad will Jump
when you poke Kim, and folka la Jurit aa
peculiar. Proh'ly he either took a ihot at
hie wlfe'a ancond huiband or elea borrowed
nutrh money off'n him to set beak to hie
uninhabited island, and I wouldn't bet a
nlfikel on either horn of 'tha what-d'ye-oall
If Kanaaa City Btar,
A Klak Offar,
"The ether day at same dlatenee from
town I was trying to mend a punctured tire
whm an automoblllat stopped and asked If
he could help me '
'Motoris t frequently da that aa a matter
of ;ouleay.,,
"Hut this waa an extraordinary oaae and
Khows how stroi.g la the fore of habit,
Thj man who ipohe to me, as ! learned
lattr when met a oar full of detective
whirling out of town on his traek, waa a
fleeing bank embesaler." -'Philadelphia
ledger.
sl Jifzw nm
G&lristmas.CSlelES,
' , , ' . ..." ... v...v ' , r ' . ' .' A - . , 1 i
TOiLESSINGS, they saiy, come
.home 'to roost so the
thoughtful person who gives him
a Gillette this, Christmas should
have luck enough for a lifetime!
Christmas Gillette now in the stores
About the
GILLETTE SAFETY RiZ0R COMPANY BOSTON;.
The Bee by George McManus
WHY MAN IS THE STRONGER.
It It Only Because Wiae Women
Wish Him to be Her
Physical Defense.
h is strange that no man envies
us; that you never hear one of these
lords of creation bemoaning the fact
that he was born a man and not a
woman. Time and time again
women will rail against the sup
posed handicap of their sex, With
out so much as a protest they let
the poet write, about man as "the
noblest work of God." It never so
much as occurred to them to dispute
or deny it.
It is refreshing and no less sur
prising, then, to find in one of the
current magazines, tlje Unpopular
Hevicw, an article, on the joy of.be.
ing a woman.
Men are geniuses, the writer con
tends, merely because women permit
them to be. Women lose nothing
by this generosity, since It it In
finitely more gratifying, more toul
satisfying, to have made a Plato than
merely to have evolved hit philos
ophy. Women deliberately and with
malice aforethought permitted her
self to be saddled with a reputation
for weakness so that man might
grow strong enough to be considered
a worthy mate for her.
"Man Is a timorous, self-distrust-ful
creature,'1 the author wrltet, "who
would never have discovered his
powers If not ttimulatcd by woman't
weaknest.
"Women, contciout how they hold
men't welfare in their hands, simply
do not dare to discover how strong
they might be if they tried, because
they have so far used their physical
weaknest not only as a means of
arousing men'a good activitiea, but
also as a means of turning to nobler
directions their bad ones. Men are
naturally acquisitive, impelled to work
niceit; "lUtIe gift" for the Gillette User !
is a packet of Blade 50u or
NOSTROPPINGSisSnNO
KNOWN
for gain and gold. Unable to deter
them from this Impulse, we let them
support us, preserving for their aakes
the fiction that we are too frail to
support ourselves," Philadelphia
Ledger.
His Bectmen.
"Rpirlmeni! Reejlmena," aald Prof. Hilary
MrMaalere before tha Harvard maatcal
school.
"There are too many nonsenatonl reetmana,
youni irentlemen. I prefer the regimens of
Nark Twain to all atirh rubbish. ,
"Hark had a very atrlot regimen, reel -know.
Ha nevar smoked but one cigar al a
time, and never araoked while sleeping.
"He never ale meat aaeept wllh hla men la,
and ha never dmnk asoapt at meals ua ba-
twren meals.
"Hla father took a drag store for a bad
debt tn Mark's boyhood and among tha
stores wsra nlna barrels of cod Hear ' atL
Thcss lasted Mark seven years. Tha rent of
the family had to get along with tha I pa
ced and nux nomlea. Mark bsing tha pel
Ha was, In fact, tha first oil trust. He tot
It ell "Boston Herald.
DELCO
Elaetrie Crank
ing, Lighting and
Ignition.
EXIDE
Storage Batteries!
This Combination Will Make Winter
Automobila Starting lure.
DBLCO-EXIDB SERVICE STATION
2024 Farnam St, Omaha, Nob.
Phone Daaiglaa SeT.
FREE BATTERY INSPECTION
$5 to $50 , v
$1
HONING' '